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Château du Verger au Coq à Saint-Germain-sur-Ille en Ille-et-Vilaine

Patrimoine classé
Patrimoine défensif
Demeure seigneuriale
Château de style Classique
Ille-et-Vilaine

Château du Verger au Coq

    Le Verger au Coq
    35250 Saint-Germain-sur-Ille
Château du Verger au Coq
Château du Verger au Coq
Château du Verger au Coq
Château du Verger au Coq
Château du Verger au Coq
Château du Verger au Coq
Château du Verger au Coq
Château du Verger au Coq
Château du Verger au Coq
Crédit photo : Pymouss - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1737
Construction of the central body
XVIIe siècle
Origins of the chapel and pavilion
1796
Purchase by Boulanger family
29 août 1988
Registration for historical monuments
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Chapel; façade and roof south (cad. A 281): entry by order of 29 August 1988

Key figures

Claude de Marboeuf - President of the Parliament of Brittany Owner in the 17th century.
Pierre Marot, comte de la Garaye - Manufacturer of the central body Date of 1737 on the pediment.
Général Georges Boulanger - Resident in the 19th century His grandfather bought the castle.
Famille Le Coq - First owners (XIVth–XVth centuries) Lords of the estate before the Thierrys.
François Thierry - Governor of Rennes (XVI century) Family successor to Le Coq.

Origin and history

The Château du Verger au Coq, located in Saint-Germain-sur-Ille en Ille-et-Vilaine, is a 17th and 18th century building marked by an elongated architecture composed of three bodies of buildings aligned. The central body, dated 1737, reflects the style of the houses of the Rennes parliamentarians, while the older chapel houses a 17th-century marble and tufted altarpiece, classified as historical monuments. The estate, surrounded by an English park, also includes commons and a porch giving access to a closed courtyard.

The castle had several influential owners: it belonged to the Le Coq families (XIVth–XVth centuries) and then to the Thierry, seigneurs du Bois Orcant, before being acquired in the 17th century by Claude de Marboeuf, president of the Parliament of Brittany. In 1796, the grandfather of General Georges Boulanger, a Rennes merchant, bought it as a national property. In the 19th century, it passed into the hands of the family of Coniac, still owner today. The site has been listed as historical monuments since 1988 for its chapel and southern façade.

The chapel, vaulted and decorated with a modillon cornice, as well as the west pavilion, probably from the seventeenth century, bear witness to the successive construction phases. The central body, built by Pierre Marot, Count of the Garaye, bears the date of 1737 on his pediment. General Boulanger lived there in the 19th century, adding a national historic dimension to this Breton monument, a symbol of the architectural and social evolution of the region.

The English park and outbuildings, organized around a courtyard accessible by a porch, complete this complex that combines residential function and prestige. The presence of a altarpiece attributed to the Lavalois workshop in Corbineau underlines the artistic importance of the place, while its inscription in 1988 devotes its heritage value. Today, the castle remains a private property, mixing aristocratic heritage and republican history.

External links